Difference between revisions of "Wild painting"

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(added NH info and languages (some translations are not really official))
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| name = Wild Painting Right Half
 
| name = Wild Painting Right Half
 
| image = Wild Painting Right Half NH Icon.png
 
| image = Wild Painting Right Half NH Icon.png
| fake-image = Wild Painting Left Half (Forgery) NH Icon.png
+
| fake-image = Wild Painting Right Half (Forgery) NH Icon.png
 
| art-name = Folding Screen Of FūJin And Raijin
 
| art-name = Folding Screen Of FūJin And Raijin
 
| author = Tawaraya Sōtatsu
 
| author = Tawaraya Sōtatsu

Revision as of 02:03, July 10, 2020

Template:Infobox Painting

The Wild Painting is a painting first introduced in Animal Crossing: City Folk. It is based upon Tawaraya Sōtatsu's Fūjin-raijin-zu, from the 17th century.

The painting depicts Fūjin, the Shinto god of the wind (pictured right), and Raijin, the Shinto god of the lightning, thunder and storms (pictured left), in a diptych style painting in four divisions. It makes use of Ma, a Japanese concept of spacing and intervals.

In Animal Crossing: New Horizons, the Wild Painting has been split into two halves, each of which are sold separately at Jolly Redd's Treasure Trawler. Interestingly, despite being labeled a painting in-game, both halves are treated as sculptures in the game's code, and consequently can occasionally be sent to the player in the mail by cranky villagers (who, like lazy, jock, and smug villagers, can mail the player art, but will only send sculptures).

Painting information

New Leaf
Item Name Buy Price Sell Price Available From
Wild Painting 3,920 Bells 490 Bells Crazy Redd

In New Horizons

Left Half


Real artwork

Wild painting

Forgery

Wild painting


Folding Screen Of FūJin And Raijin
Tawaraya Sōtatsu, 17th century
Gold leaf and ink on paper


Museum description This folding screen shows dynamic brushwork of Fūjin and Raijin on a gold-leaf background. It is thought to be the masterpiece of Tawaraya Sōtatsu, an early-Edo- period artist. The simplification of the subjects is a style that was carried on by Ogata Kōrin. It's a style still in use today in the Rinpa school of Japanese painting.
Buy price  4,980 Bells
Sell price  1,245 Bells[nb 1]
Obtain from  Jolly Redd's Treasure Trawler
Authenticity Unknown
Furniture size 2.0 x 1.0


Right Half


Real artwork

Wild painting

Forgery

Wild painting


Folding Screen Of FūJin And Raijin
Tawaraya Sōtatsu, 17th century
Gold leaf and ink on paper


Museum description This folding screen shows dynamic brushwork of Fūjin and Raijin on a gold-leaf background. It is thought to be the masterpiece of Tawaraya Sōtatsu, an early-Edo- period artist. The simplification of the subjects is a style that was carried on by Ogata Kōrin. It's a style still in use today in the Rinpa school of Japanese painting.
Buy price  4,980 Bells
Sell price  1,245 Bells[nb 1]
Obtain from  Jolly Redd's Treasure Trawler
Authenticity Unknown
Furniture size 2.0 x 1.0
  1. 1.0 1.1 Cannot be sold if it is a forgery.

Authenticity

In New Leaf, forgeries of this painting are flipped horizontally.

In New Horizons, forgeries of both halves of the painting have the creature's color swapped. Forgery of the left half has a green creature, forgery of the right half has a white creature.